PUBLICATIONS

Van Gogh: The Life

Steven Naifeh and Gregory White Smith galvanized readers with their astonishing Jackson Pollock: An American Saga, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for biography, a book acclaimed for its miraculous research and overwhelming narrative power. In Van Gogh: The Life, Naifeh and Smith have written another tour de force—an exquisitely detailed, compellingly readable, and ultimately heartbreaking portrait of creative genius Vincent van Gogh.

The biography, which was a New York Times bestseller, has been translated into Chinese, Dutch, French, German, Korean, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, and Spanish and is being translated into Italian and Japanese.

In their magisterial new biography, Van Gogh: The Life, Steven Naifeh and Gregory White Smith provide a guided tour through the personal world and work of that Dutch painter, shining a bright light on the evolution of his art. . . . What [the authors] capture so powerfully is Van Gogh’s extraordinary will to learn, to persevere against the odds.

— Michiko Kakutani, The New York Times

Brilliant ... Steven Naifeh and Gregory White Smith are the big-game hunters of modern art history ... [Van Gogh] rushes along on a tide of research ... At once a model of scholarship and an emotive, pacy chunk of hagiography.

— Martin Herbert, The Daily Telegraph (London)

Jackson Pollock: An American Saga

Jackson Pollock was more than a great artist, he was a creative force of nature. He changed not only the course of Western art, but our very definition of “art.” He was the quintessential tortured genius, an American Vincent van Gogh, cut from the same unconforming cloth as his contemporaries Ernest Hemingway and James Dean–and tormented by the same demons; a “cowboy artist” who rose from obscurity to take his place among the titans of modern art, and whose paintings now command millions of dollars.

Naifeh and Smith portray the life behind that extraordinary achievement–the disjointed childhood, the sibling rivalry, the sexual ambiguity, and the artistic frustration out of which both artist and art developed. The biography won the Pulitzer Prize in 1991. It was a finalist for the National Book Award, the basis of the Academy Award-winning film “Pollock,” an inspiration for John Updike’s Seek My Face, and a New York Times bestseller. It was translated into French and Spanish.

Amazing … An extraordinarily riveting work, full of miraculous research.

— Meryle Secrest, Chicago Sun-Times

Clearly the definitive work.

— Stephen Amidon, Financial Times (London)

The most thoroughly detailed portrait ever of a U.S. artist. It’s as imposing as a history book, as entertaining as a novel and as close as the reader may ever come to sharing the breadth - and sensing the madness - of artistic genius and the genesis of a masterpiece.

— David Zimmerman, USA Today

Unprecedented ... Never before have we had such a thorough and affecting account of an American artist.

— Artelia Court, Los Angeles Times

Gene Davis

A monograph on the seminal Washington Color School painter, Gene Davis, known for his elaborate orchestrations of vertical stripes, based on Naifeh's Harvard University Ph.D. dissertation.

Culture Making: Money, Success and the New York Art World

An analysis of the economics of New York art world, based on Naifeh’s prize-winning undergraduate thesis at Princeton University.

EXHIBITION CATALOGS

Published in May 2013, this catalogue accompanied The Columbia Museum of Art’s retrospective museum exhibition of Naifeh’s paintings and sculpture entitled “Found in Translation: The Art of Steven Naifeh.” Twenty-six large-scale works were on view in the CMA special exhibition galleries from May 18 to September 1, 2013.

Published in March 2014 by the Leila Heller Gallery, this catalogue accompanied the artist’s exhibition Found in Translation: The Art of Steven Naifeh, which ran jointly at the Leila Heller Gallery in New York, March 27-April 26, 2014, and at MANA Contemporary in Hoboken, New Jersey, March 2-Augsut 31, 2014. Essay by Heather Ecker.

ARTICLES ON ART

“Gene Davis: Equinox”

with Gregory White Smith, in Kerner, Joseph D., and Jane E. Neidhardt, eds., A Gallery of Modern Art at Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis: The Washington University Gallery of Art, 1994